Saeed was indicted in December on charges of collecting funds from different cities in Pakistan’s Punjab province to finance terrorism through assets made and held ostensibly for charitable purposes. He was indicted on six charges under anti-terrorism laws.

The anti-terrorism court sentenced Saeed to six months of imprisonment for being a member of a “proscribed organization” under Pakistani law. He was sentenced to another consecutive five years for a charge for “illegal property.” Saeed’s associate, Zafar Iqbal, was similarly convicted and sentenced.

Following Wednesday’s verdict, there are four verdicts still due out of the six charges against Saeed.

On June 7, 1893, Mohandas Ghandi committed his first act of civil disobedience in South Africa. Because he was an Indian, Ghandi was ordered to move to the third class section of a train, despite holding a first class ticket. When he refused, Ghandi was thrown off of the train. Ghandi would go on to organize efforts by Indians living in South Africa to oppose racial discrimination there by founding the Natal Indian Congress. He would then return to his native India to lead its drive for independence from Great Britain.